Feedback
by Ty Boyd
Published on this site: May 3rd, 2005 - See
more articles from this month...

I believe that asking for and acting on objective feedback
is the best way to improve your speaking skills. In our Excellence
in Speaking Institute (ESI), we call this 20/20 feedback.
Honest, objective feedback helps you identify your strengths and
weaknesses, so that you can enhance the former and repair the latter.
Also, looking for the strengths as well as the weaknesses
helps make the feedback more balanced and feel less confrontational.
You have to use your active listening skills to really hear
and internalize the
feedback
A course like ESI or ESI-Advanced gives you the best possible
feedback. But if you need a quick dose, get a friend with
a camcorder to videotape you doing a presentation or two.
Then, together go through the videotape to determine your
strengths and weaknesses from the checklist below.
- Rambling. Do you have a clear road map of where you are
going and do you follow it?
- Monotone. Are you using vocal variety, varying your pitch,
tone and volume to keep the presentation interesting?
- Topic Knowledge. Do you have a good grasp of the topic?
- Energy, Passion. Are you pumped up or pooped out?
- Non-Words. Um, do you, uh, throw in a lot of, you know,
um, non-words?
- Eye Contact. Do you really look at and connect with the
members of the audience?
- Body Language. Do you distract your audience by wandering,
fidgeting or pacing?
- Appropriate Material. Do you use profanity or questionable
humor?
- Preparation. When it's show time, are you ready for your
close-up, or are you winging it?
Get feedback on these items and I guarantee that you will improve
your presentation skills. Not only does 20/20 feedback work to help
improve speaking skills, it works for companies, too.

Ty Boyd, CEO of Ty Boyd Executive Learning Systems
http://www.tyboyd.com),
is in the Broadcast Hall of Fame and the Speakers Hall of
Fame. He has taught presentation skills to Fortune 1000 executives
in more than 40 countries. His Excellence In Speaking Institute
celebrates its 25th anniversary in 2005.

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